Sexual Assault Sexual assault is any unwanted sexual activity that occurs without clear consent from both individuals. Sexual assault is never the victim’s fault. No one has the right to have sexual contact with you without your consent. Various forms of sexual assault include: • Rape. Sexual assault is called rape if penetration has occurred (vaginal, oral, or anal).…
As we are moving onto college, there is an issue that you need to be aware of. Sexual assault in U.S colleges and universities has been going on for years but recently it has gained national attention. 1 in 5 women and 1 in 16 men will be sexually assaulted on campus. Most colleges will address sexual harassment and assault in the freshmen orientation that they "strongly suggest" all freshmen to attend and some colleges will just email a powerpoint to the students and that will be it. Students are at the highest risk of being assaulted on campus during their freshmen and sophomore year.…
Due to such high violence and shock stemming from sexaul assault crimes, prevention strategies are necessary to make the public even more aware of how to avoid such attacks, or how to help those recover from attacks if they already have been victimized. The main focus of prevention strategies are to reduce the number of sex offenders, victims, and target risk factors than can lead to sex crimes. A few prevention strategies already being utilized are Safe Dates, Shifting Boundaries and Real Consent. These are considered Effective strategies, meaning they solely focus on how to prevent perpetration of sex crimes. Safe dates promotes how to avoid being initiated into physical, emotional and mental abuse in relationships; Shifting Boundaries targets…
While more than half of sexual assaults against women of college age occur off campus, on campus assaults are a problem that college and universities can and should do more to address. The best statistics show there is a correlation between 3 factors, alcohol use, sorority membership, and class status, and sexual assault on campus. To combat these trends colleges and universities need to address these factors while taking into account that any measures they take not simply move the problem from campus to off campus locations. This means that the measures taken should be centered on raising awareness, encouraging responsibility, and holding offenders accountable in a just way, while also addressing the campus code of conduct.…
However, whether this crime is increasing or decreasing is up for debate. Based on statistics, the numbers widely vary across public Universities. University of Texas at Austin’s crime reports have been increasing, while Texas Tech’s has stayed mostly the same, and University of Texas at Arlington’s reports have shown a decreased over time. Multiple aspects could be majorly affecting the number of reports, such as: programs and organizations on campus that help to decrease the problem, current cultural aspects and increased feminine empowerment that lead to reports being made more often, or that police and the Universities cover up the true numbers in one way or another. Other academic studies have also shown that rape is a persistent problem…
Rape on U.S. College Campuses: Causes, Effects, and What’s Being Done to Stop It Rape culture on college campuses is pervasive and blatant, but universities, as well as fellow students, politicians, law enforcement officials, media messages, and gender roles in a culture where men dominate and women are not taken as seriously, endorse the bias that sexual assault is the victim’s fault or “unavoidable” in a culture where X, instead of focusing on preventing rape by changing the behavior of perpetrators. Rape culture on campus is perpetuated by the media, U.S. laws, and universities trying to protect their name. The continued emphasis on the actions of sexual assault victims, instead of aggressors, is a real problem in U.S. colleges today and…
From time to time, we come across stories of sexual assault either through the news or a tv show. At first, there may be some people who are interested in the story but feel disturbed by it; however, there may also be people who simply don 't care just because it did not happen to them or it doesn’t affect directly. In addition, some people may either feel sympathy for the victim, or others may insinuate that the whole action was there fault. However, imagine how the victim feels after this degrading and traumatizing event. They may feel disgusted, shocked,and upset.…
The Rape Treatment Center at Santa Monica UCLA Medical Center say’s that a university should have three goals in their campus based sexual assault programs. One is to educate students, faculty and staff about sexual violence. Two is to prevent sexual assaults involving members of the campus community. The third and final goal is to provide an appropriate response when sexual assaults occur. These goals can be achieved when colleges implement effective policies, protocols, service delivery systems, security measures and educational activities…
Sexual assault, defined by the United States Department of Justice as “any type of sexual contact or behavior that occurs without the explicit consent of the recipient” (“Sexual Assault | OVW | Department Of Justice”), is a serious crime that is taking place across the country including on college and university campuses. When there is an occurrence of a sexual assault being reported to the educational institution, the establishment will administer their own investigation and hearing to determine whether the accused is responsible for the assault along with the extent of punishment to be bestowed upon said accused in the event they are found responsible. Should educational institutions be permitted to oversee their own investigations, prosecutions…
This explains why sexual assault is widely considered to be the most underreported violent crime in the United States. Survivors have stated some of the reasons they did not report their sexual assaults. The survivors said they were in fear of reprisal, they did not think their case was important enough to respond to, they had a belief that the police would not do anything to help, they did not want family or others to know, they feared there was a lack of evidence and many more reasons. Due partially to low reporting rates, only 9 percent of all rapists get prosecuted. Only 5 percent of cases lead to a felony conviction.…
Sexual assault is the subject of many movies and popular television shows, but what people don’t necessarily understand is that on college campuses, the assailant is usually a friend or acquaintance and many assaults go unreported. The evil villain who attacks from the dark is more likely a date and the attack not a surprise from the shadows, but forced sex in a dorm room or apartment. The environment of a college campus brings together young adults who are dating, making new friends and often drinking for the first time and this environment creates opportunity to take advantage of a weaker or disoriented person. This environment puts an increased responsibility on the schools to ensure the environment is safe by preparing the students, employees…
While victim-blaming isn’t entirely universal (some individuals’ experiences, background, and culture make them significantly less likely to victim-blame), in some ways, it is a natural psychological reaction to crime. Not everyone who engages in victim-blaming explicitly accuses someone of failing to prevent what happened to them. In fact, in its more understated forms, people may not always realize they’re doing it. Something as simple as hearing about a crime and thinking you would have been more careful had you been in the victim’s shoes is a mild form of victim-blaming.…
In the course of their freshman year of college about fifteen percent of women are sexually assaulted while under the dark influence of alcohol or drugs or even both, according to reports whether it be medical or police. What is possibly more important than this statistic about "incapacitated rape" is that there is also a pattern. Freshmen women who had been victims of such assaults before college were at significant risk of being traumatized again, according to the study published in 2009, in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs. The researchers found eighteen percent of students said they had been assaulted while intoxicated before college, and 41 percent of those young women were attacked again while incapacitated to some degree during…
Sexual Victimization has several meanings and could happen anywhere. I choose this topic because a case occurred right here in Ocala that was so disturbing, it made the top of my list. According to (Wallace & Roberson,2014) Sexual victimization has several meanings – verbal coercion to have sex with a partner, rape by a stranger, or a woman/man that is being fondled in a bar and forced intercourse when a woman is way too intoxicated to protest. In this case sexual violence along with kidnapping is what took place: (Wallace & Roberson, 2014) Sexual violence is considered any intentional act or omission that results in physical, emotional or financial injury in a sexual context to either a woman or a man.…
Sexual assault and rape in the United States of America is reaching new epidemic levels and nothing is being done to stop it. Rape kits sit untested and collecting dust all over the United States and it is estimated that the numbers have reached hundreds of thousands. In places like New York City for example, the backlog of untested rape kits by 2003 had reached 17,000. In order to reduce this epidemic, the country must implement harsher punishments and prioritize educational classes earlier in age in order to emphasize the importance of consent and responsibility.…